Religions in Medieval Europe (HIST 2001)

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Instructor: Andrew Drenas, D.Phil. Classroom: Dugan 207 Class Meetings: TuTh, 8:00-9:15 E-mail: Andrew_Drenas@uml.edu Course Website: http://faculty.uml.edu/adrenas/teaching/hist2001.aspx Office Hours: Texts: TuTh, 1:00-3:00 p.m., and by appointment, in Dugan 106N Internet History Sourcebooks Project Course Description: Rand McNally s Historical Atlas of the World (required) This course serves as an introduction to religion in medieval Europe (ca. 500-1500), that is, the Roman and Eastern traditions of Christianity, Christian movements deemed heretical by orthodoxy, Judaism, and Islam. Understanding the medieval history of these religions results in our gaining not only a comprehension of their individual developments but also how the three great monotheistic faiths have become some of the most powerful religious forces ever seen in civilization. These different religions will be treated not only individually but also in dialogue with one another. Grading: Quizzes/Participation 25% 100 points Mid-term Exam 25% 100 points Final Exam 25% 100 points Papers 25% 100 points Quizzes/Participation: This part of your grade includes two map quizzes to be given at the beginning and roughly midway through the course. Each is worth 25 points. For this course, participation in class discussions is also a significant part of your grade, worth 50 points. Students need to be prepared for class and ready to engage in discussion. Discussions will focus primarily on the assigned primary source readings as well as questions relevant to the lecture materials posed to the students by the instructor. Students who know that they will have to miss a class meeting should let the instructor know in advance. Exams: There will be two written exams for this course. The mid-term will deal with the material covered during the first half of the class; the final, the second half. Each exam is worth 100 points. Papers: There are two writing assignments for this class. Each student must choose two primary source documents of interest to him or her and analyze them based on criteria to be provided by the instructor. One paper needs to focus on a source relevant to medieval Christianity; the other, either Judaism or Islam. Papers must be a minimum of 4 full pages, or 5 pages, in length. Each paper is worth 50 points. Late Assignments: Any assignment, quiz, and exam turned in or taken late will result in a 10-point deduction for each day it is tardy. It is your responsibility to follow along with the syllabus. 1

Grade values: A = 94-100 A- = 90-93 B+ = 87-89 B = 84-86 B- = 80-83 C+ = 77-79 C = 74-76 C- = 70-73 D+ = 67-69 D = 60-66 F Miscellaneous : Extra Credit: Extra credit options are available to students. Please be aware that the instructor will not permit those who do not attend class or who put little to no effort into their work to do extra credit. Students can earn a potential +20 in extra credit, and can do so through writing an extra primary source analysis (or two) and/or sharing an oral presentation in class. You cannot choose a document written by the same author who wrote your first source, nor a document from the same place and time in history. Oral presentations must expand on topics discussed in class or introduce subjects not brought up in the classroom, but that relate to course material. You need to receive the instructor s approval before submitting and/or doing all extra credit work. Academic Dishonesty: Academic dishonesty will not be tolerated in this class. All work submitted by students must be the students own work, not anyone else s. If the instructor has any reason to believe that a student has plagiarized information from the Internet or a book then that student will receive an F on the assignment. For more information on what constitutes academic dishonesty and plagiarism, please see http://www.uml.edu/catalog/undergraduate/policies/academic_dishonesty.htm. Disabilities and Religious Observances: Students with a documented disability should let the instructor know right away so that any necessary arrangements for the classroom can be made. Let the instructor know at the beginning of the course, not after the fact once the course is underway. Also, students who may have a conflict between any religious observances and class assignments should let the instructor know well in advance so that alternate arrangements may be made. 2

Texts: Internet History Sourcebooks Project (IHSP) Tentative Class Schedule and Assignments Week of January 19 Introduction to course Thurs. Medieval Europe s Religious Background Week of January 25 IHSP: Leo the Great s On the Petrine Doctrine, Gregory the Great s Letters Showing Papal Activity, and The Christianisation of Russia The Byzantine Empire, and the Papacy Thurs. Early Medieval Missions and Conversion; primary source discussion Week of February 1 MAP QUIZ # 1; IHSP: Gregory of Nyssa s Life of St. Macrina, and The Rule of St. Benedict The Foundations of Monasticism Thurs. MAP QUIZ # 1; Mt. Athos documentary; primary source discussion Week of February 8 IHSP: Surahs 10 and 19 from the Quran, excerpts from the Sunnah, and Muslim and Christian accounts of The Battle of Poitiers (732) The Rise and Expansion of Islam Thurs. Islam; primary source discussion Week of February 15 Monday schedule no class Thurs. The Iconoclastic Controversy in the East; the Papal Monarchy, the Great Schism, and Ecclesiastical Authority in the West Week of February 22 IHSP: John of Damascus s In Defense of Icons and part 1 of Apologia against Those Who Decry Holy Images, Gregory VII s Dictatus papae, and Innocent III s Letters on Papal Policies Conclude the Papal Monarchy, etc.; primary source discussion; review for MID-TERM Thurs. Visit to St. George Greek Orthodox Church Week of February 29 Study for MID-TERM Becket (1964) Thurs. Conclude Becket Week of March 7 MID-TERM; BEGIN CONSIDERING PRIMARY SOURCE DOCUMENT CHOICE MID-TERM Thurs. The Jews of Europe Week of March 14 Spring recess have fun! 3

Week of March 21 IHSP: Maimonedes s Laws concerning Mashiach, Fulcher of Chartres s version of The Speech of Pope Urban II at the Council of Clermont, 1095, Solomon bar Samson s The Crusaders in Mainz, May 27, 1096, Bernard Gui s Inquisitorial Technique ; PRIMARY SOURCE DOCUMENT CHOICE The Crusades, and the Reconquista Thurs. Medieval Heresy; primary source discussion; DEADLINE FOR PRIMARY SOURCE DOCUMENT CHOICE Week of March 28 Kingdom of Heaven (2005) Thurs. Conclude Kingdom of Heaven Week of April 4 MAP QUIZ # 2; IHSP, and elsewhere: Two Accounts of the Early Career of St. Bernard, c. 1150, The Rule of the Franciscan Order, Clare of Assisi s Letters, and Thomas Aquinas s Reasons in the Proof of the Existence of God MAP QUIZ #2; the New Religious Orders Thurs. High Medieval Western Theology, and Mysticism; primary source discussion Week of April 11 IHSP: Filofei s Moscow as the Third Rome, Boniface VIII s Unam sanctam, Petrarch s Letter Criticizing the Avignon Papacy, Pope Gregory XI s Condemnation of Wycliffe 1382 and Wycliffe s Reply 1384, and The Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges Review for primary source analysis; the Greek Church under Ottoman Islam, Crisis and Reform in Western Europe Thurs. Conclude Crisis and Reform, etc.; primary source discussion Week of April 18 PRIMARY SOURCE ANALYSIS Medieval Christian Worship and Art; DEADLINE FOR PRIMARY SOURCE ANALYSIS Thurs. Conclude Medieval Christian Worship and Art Week of April 25 Review for exam; extra credit presentations Thurs. Make-up day Final Exam TBA 4

Religions in Medieval Europe Map Quiz 1 The East MAP TERMS Kingdoms, Regions, etc. Anatolia Bulgaria Cappadocia Greece Palestine Syria Arabian Peninsula Byzantine Empire Egypt Ottoman Empire Russia Cities and Towns Alexandria Baghdad Damascus Kiev Medina Nicaea Athens Constantinople (later Istanbul) Jerusalem Mecca Moscow Bodies of Water and Landmarks Aegean Sea Baltic Sea Bosporus Dnieper River Mediterranean Sea Balkan Mountains Black Sea Caspian Sea Jordan River Nile River *The vast majority of these terms can be found in the relevant medieval atlas maps from pp. 19 to 41. You can also find them through online searches. For the purposes of our map quiz, the Byzantine and Ottoman Empires can essentially be found in the same area, though at different times.* Location of map for quiz: Scroll down to Map Quiz 1 Map The East at http://faculty.uml.edu/adrenas/teaching/hist2001.aspx You should be able to print this map off, or any other map you have found useful for preparing for the quiz, and increase its size through a xerox machine or other program. 5

Map Quiz 2 The West MAP TERMS Kingdoms, Regions, etc. Aragon England Granada Ireland Papal States Scotland Switzerland Castile France Holy Roman Empire Italy Portugal Spain Cities and Towns Avignon Clermont Cordova Madrid Poitiers Rome Canterbury Constance London Paris Prague Vienna Bodies of Water and Landmarks Alps Atlantic Ocean North Sea Rhine River Thames River Apennines English Channel Pyrenees Seine River Tiber River *The vast majority of these terms can be found in the relevant medieval atlas maps from pp. 18 to 40. You can also find them through online searches.* Location of map for quiz: Scroll down to Map Quiz 2 The West at http://faculty.uml.edu/adrenas/teaching/hist2001.aspx You should be able to print this map off, or any other map you have found useful for preparing for the quiz, and increase its size through a xerox machine or other program. 6

Primary Source Analysis The historian s main tools are called primary sources, documents written during the period of time that one is studying. The goal of those studying history is to go back to these documents in order to try to determine what happened, and not to rely solely on the lens or filter of others research or interpretations (secondary sources), as helpful as those may be. Instructions for Analysis 1. Choose two primary sources of interest to you that pertain to the material covered in this course. The first needs to treat a subject relevant to medieval Christianity. The second should focus on a theme germane to either Judaism or Islam. Your sources must be documents that we have not already read in class. You can choose from relevant sources at one of the two websites: http://www.newadvent.org/fathers http://legacy.fordham.edu/halsall Please choose the documents you want to work on by Thursday, March 24. Once you know what you want to read and analyze, please e-mail me to let me know, providing me with the documents links. 2. Write the papers, and be prepared to address all of the following. a. What is the primary source you have chosen, and why have you chosen it? (5 points) Tell me what you read and be sure to explain why you decided to read it. b. Who is the author of the document, and what potential preconceptions and goals did he or she have while composing it? (10 points) Here you want to tell me who the actual writer of the text was. Identify the individual or individuals by name, and then say a little something about this person or people. (For example, if you are reading an excerpt from Thomas Aquinas s Summa, do not just say Aquinas was the author. Identify Aquinas as the author, and then briefly mention some of the roles he played in the Dominican Order and in scholasticism.) Important: do not tell me who the recent editor and translator were. (Hint: if you find yourself about to write that your author was writing in 1995, or another such recent, non-medieval date, that is incorrect!) No! You need to identify the original author. For some documents, there may not be a known author; clearly state that. Regarding preconceptions and goals, this is where you identify the author s specific religious and possibly philosophical and political views that influenced what he or she said and did. As far as goals are concerned, address what the author was trying to accomplish by writing the text. Students frequently struggle with this part of the paper. If you have any queries, please let me know so I can help you. c. When was the document written and what was the historical context surrounding its composition? (10 points) While answering when, all you need to do is provide me with a date or an approximate date. Remember that our course covers ca. 500 to 1500. If you see more recent dates connected to the text, it is probably the date the document was edited or translated; you don t want that. Concerning the historical context, you need to explain here what was going on in history at the time your primary source was written. Provide information both about the document s specific context and the broader context of the world at the time. You can go straight back to the lecture materials to find that information. Students often struggle with the context, so beware! d. Summarize and analyze the content of the document, providing quotations from the text (10 points) Explain to me what you read about. Make sure you include enough direct quotations from the text in your summary. 7

e. What impact did this document have during the Middle Ages, and is there a present impact? (10 points) I think this is self-explanatory, but do remember that you need to address the impact of the document itself and not necessarily the theme being addressed in it. Do answer both aspects of this question. While thinking about a document s present impact, something to consider is how it provides us with historical insight into a particular aspect of the past. f. Make sure your paper is written in the proper format (5 points). See some guidelines below. Potential: 100 points 3. The papers are due in hard copy in class on Tuesday, April 19. Feel free to submit your paper early. If it is tardy, 10 points will be deducted from your grade each day it is late. Please contact me if you have any questions or need any help. Please also consult the sample primary source analysis on the course website. Scroll down to Primary Source Analysis Sample at http://faculty.uml.edu/adrenas/teaching/hist2001.aspx. It will offer you a clear model as to what I am looking for. 4. Please answer the questions in the order in which I ask them, with each question having a paragraph of its own. Proper block quotes must be used for direct quotations exceeding four lines. For more details, see http://www.englishdiscourse.org/block.quotes.htm. 5. No citations and/or works cited page are required if you are relying only on your primary source document and our class lectures. If you are making use of outside books and legitimate academic online sources (i.e. no Wikipedia, personal websites, etc.), they must be cited in your paper and included in a works cited page. You may use either footnotes (preferable for historical prose) or parenthetical notes. For the proper format for footnotes and works cited pages, see http://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/tools_citationguide.html. Regarding the proper format for MLA parenthetical notes, see https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/02/. 6. Writing Guidelines a. Papers must be a minimum of 4 full pages, or 5 pages, in length. The works cited page does not count toward the page limit. b. Papers must be written in ESSAY format. Papers with bullet points and incomplete sentences will be rejected! c. Prose related to historical documents should be written in the past tense, not the present tense. (E.g., The popes ruled over the Papal States during the Middle Ages, and not The popes rule over the Papal States during the Middle Ages. ) d. Font: Times New Roman (size 12) e. Format: Double-spaced with one-inch margins all around f. Pages must be stapled, numbered, and have your full name on at least the first page g. Absolutely no slang or text-speak h. Make sure that you spell check! 8

Primary Source Analysis Checklist If you are able to check off all the following, you increase your chances of scoring very well on your primary source analysis. I e-mailed the instructor to alert him of the primary source documents I want to analyze I have taken a look at, and understand, the sample primary source analysis posted on the course website I have answered the analysis questions in essay format, and in the order in which they were asked My prose is written in the past tense, not the present My papers are at least a full 4 pages, or 5 pages, in length In my papers, I have provided parenthetical notes or footnotes, and a works cited page, for all sources I consulted and quoted outside my primary source document and the course s lecture materials I have abided by the font, font size, and margin guidelines described in the syllabus My pages are numbered, with my name being on at least the first page I have proofread and spellchecked my work My papers are stapled 9